(April 16, 2010) â€“ When is a terrorist not considered a terrorist? When the US media identifies him or her as a â€œChristianâ€. And when is a terrorist group not considered a terrorist group? When the US media calls it an â€œanti-government militiaâ€.

Exceptionalism is alive and well when it comes to reporting on violence in the name of religion, as evidenced in the recent case of the Michigan-based Hutaree, a group that the media has labeled a militia following recent FBI raids that uncovered stockpiles of illegal weapons, and a plot to kill law enforcement officers and â€œlevy warâ€ against the United States.

The leader of the group, 45-year-old David Brian Stone, pulled no punches about who he was, coining the term â€œHutareeâ€ which his website translates as â€œChristian warriorâ€ for his group. His motto is the biblical passage John 15:13: â€œGreater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.â€

The behavior of this group seems very similar to that of those termed terrorists by the media.

Yet Joshua Rhett Miller of Fox News described the Hutaree in a 29 March story as a â€œpurportedly Christian-based militia group.â€ In a similar vein, Nick Bunkley and Charlie Savage of The New York Times identified Stone and the Hutaree somewhat apologetically as â€œapocalyptic Christian militantsâ€ in their 29 March report. This, despite the fact that the group not only stockpiled weapons and engaged in training identical to Al Qaedaâ€™s modus operandi, but even planned improvised explosive devices based on those used by terrorists in Iraq.

In its â€œTimes Topicsâ€ section, The New York Times positively contorts itself to avoid using the word â€œterroristâ€. It describes the Hutaree as a â€œMichigan-based Christian militia groupâ€ and, mirroring the language of US Attorney General Eric Holder, as â€œanti-government extremists.â€

Are we reserving the term â€œterroristâ€ only for Muslims these days? In coverage of stories like the thwarted plan to bomb synagogues in New York in May 2009 or Umar Farouk Abdulmutallabâ€™s attempt to blow up a plane over Detroit, the mainstream media has no qualms about discussing â€œfoiled terror plots.â€ Such a reservation stokes indiscriminate fear of Muslim â€œothersâ€. It also constructs an implicit â€œus versus themâ€ dualism between a broadly â€œChristian Americaâ€ and an allegedly monolithic â€œMuslim worldâ€, as American political scientist Samuel Huntington most notoriously opined in his â€œClash of Civilisationsâ€ theory.

Religion is all too often seen as the root of terrorist violence, rather than as one of its most effective tools. As Scott Shane argued in the 4 April New York Times article â€œDropping the word bombâ€, we need a robust debate about what terms to use across cases. Journalists can help by practicing consistency, and by pointing out attempts to scapegoat one group and exempt another from the opprobrium associated with terms like â€œterrorist.â€

Mainstream Christians like me cringe when a group like the Hutaree is identified as â€œChristianâ€. Perhaps this incident can help other Americans empathise with what close to 1.5 billion Muslims might have felt every time in the last few years they have heard the words â€œMuslim terroristsâ€ or, far worse, â€œIslamic terroristsâ€. A good rule to follow, for journalists and for all of us, might be to treat others as we would like to be treated ourselves.

And that means calling a terrorist â€“ of whatever background â€“ exactly that.

Jon Pahl (jpahl@ltsp.edu) is Professor of History of Christianity in North America at The Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia, and author of Empire of Sacrifice: The Religious Origins of American Violence. This article first appeared in The Colorado Daily and was written for the Common Ground News Service (CGNews) www.commongroundnews.org